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Stockbroker Tudor
Stockbroker Tudor is a term with pejorative beginnings. It is a domestic architectural style which has been reviled for being pompous and inauthentic however it has some genuine links to the Arts and Crafts - a design movement of ongoing interest to Kennedy Nolan.
The Arts and Crafts movement fascinates us because of the complexities contained in it’s incipient Modernism parallel to a pre-occupation with the crafts of making. During the twentieth century, the next time that Modernism became preoccupied with craft and making was Brutalism - also a movement of ongoing interest to this practice.
The house investigates a reconciliation of high Modernism and the Tudor revival elements of the Arts and Crafts movement - on first glance seemingly incompatible. The resulting new building fabric has the clarity of functionalist planning and flexibility afforded by modern technology,also the relevance of contemporary aesthetics such as de-limited horizontal space and breaking down of interior/exterior thresholds.
The detail and resolution of
the architecture acknowledges the reality of domestic construction– that it is
hand-made - and expresses this through ostensible elements of carpentry,
metalwork, tiling and glazing and through colours and forms which touch on the
memory of ecclesiastical and pre-Raphaelite preoccupations of Arts and Crafts
design.
Photography by Derek Swalwell